Sometimes you spend your entire eight -
hour work day staring out the window.
Not exact matches
It seems like I spend twice as long in the car every
day idling my way through rush
hour and
staring at the rusted bumper of the car in front of me, when I could be writing and connecting with clients at
work.
For the millions of us who
stared at Windows XP desktops for
hours every
day for
work and school, there's a certain nostalgia now for the old Windows user interface, before the flat design ethos of Windows 8 squashed everything into neat little boxes that are multicoloured without being that, well, colourful.
As medical writers, many of us spend at least 6
hours a
day sitting at a desk,
staring at the computer screen,
working with statistical outputs (in the form of tables and graphs), literature, and slide presentations.
Every
day when Katie heads to
work, Max will spend
hours staring at the door until she returns but also kills time by visiting with other pet friends in the building, including a Dachshund named Buddy (Hannibal Buress, Neighbors 2: Sorority Rising, 2016), a Pug named Mel (Bobby Moynihan, Sisters, 2015), a lazy, fat cat named Chloe (Lake Bell, Million Dollar Arm, 2014) and a Pomeranian named Gidget (Jenny Slate, The Obvious Child, 2015) who harbors a secret crush on Max.
There's no doubt exhaustive
work days and
hours staring at the road cause sleepiness.
And though tablet screens will soon offer higher resolution and brighter colors than the electronic ink still favored by most e-readers, you may find that
staring at a digital display for
hours can tire out your eyes (especially if you've already been doing it at
work all
day).